Wires_Guy_wires
Imperial Masterpiece
Merriam Webster defines a plant being root bound as "A tangled mess with little to no room for new growth".
I agree with this definition. Because being root bound is a problem for plants, and there are signs like yellowing foliage, wilting, growth retardation, pushing the rootmass above the pot rim, and a couple more.
I disagree with the idea that circling roots around the edge of a container are a sign of being root bound. Because it's not. It's a sign that the roots favor hugging against the container walls over being in the center of the container. It's what roots do.
Plants being rootbound almost always involves circling roots. But not all circling roots are caused by being rootbound.
As you might suspect, I've done a stroll around ye olde internet again and it irks me that people call circling roots around the edge of a pot 'Root bound'.
Over the course of a year I've seen a lot of people do repotting based on the assumption that circling roots mean that there's no more room for growth. But that's not it. There's plenty of room usually, and let's be honest: the roots always probe the container walls first, and get to branch in the core of the container later.
This post is meant to spark a discussion and maybe change some minds. Let us know what your opinion is about what being rootbound is, and maybe just as important: what it isn't.
I agree with this definition. Because being root bound is a problem for plants, and there are signs like yellowing foliage, wilting, growth retardation, pushing the rootmass above the pot rim, and a couple more.
I disagree with the idea that circling roots around the edge of a container are a sign of being root bound. Because it's not. It's a sign that the roots favor hugging against the container walls over being in the center of the container. It's what roots do.
Plants being rootbound almost always involves circling roots. But not all circling roots are caused by being rootbound.
As you might suspect, I've done a stroll around ye olde internet again and it irks me that people call circling roots around the edge of a pot 'Root bound'.
Over the course of a year I've seen a lot of people do repotting based on the assumption that circling roots mean that there's no more room for growth. But that's not it. There's plenty of room usually, and let's be honest: the roots always probe the container walls first, and get to branch in the core of the container later.
This post is meant to spark a discussion and maybe change some minds. Let us know what your opinion is about what being rootbound is, and maybe just as important: what it isn't.